In a release to the Daily Business News on MHProNews, Oklahoma City based, national employment service Express and the Harris Poll have provided snapshots about the attitudes and outlook of blue collar workers.

According to their latest Labor Day poll results:

86% Satisfied with Their Job;

85% Believe Their Life Is Heading “In Right Direction“;

51% Say the Country is Heading in the Right Direction

70% Don’t Trust Elected Officials

Sixty-nine (69) percent also say their local communities are heading in the right direction.

“The national survey of 1,049 blue collar workers was conducted online by The Harris Poll between July 9 and 23, 2018,” said the statement and report from Express, “and offers a detailed, in-depth look at the background and attitudes of those working in blue collar professions.”

Construction and manufacturing are both among those groups surveyed. The graphic below is per Express.

“There’s been a great deal of chatter about the future and frustrations of America’s blue collar workers,” said Express CEO William “Bill” Stoller. “Our survey reveals that blue collar workers are upbeat, optimistic and proud of the work they do. While the news is often full of stories about economic anxieties, this survey shows workers who are exceptionally optimistic. While they certainly express concerns, it’s clear that the vast majority feel like things will work out for themselves and their families.”

Stoller seems to be implying that doom and gloom attitudes among workers is ‘fake news,’ based upon what this Harris poll revealed.

The results are similar to what consumer confidence and the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB), consumer confidence, and other surveys have reflected in much of last 18 months, during the Trump Administration.

U.S. blue collar workers have an average of total of 22 years’ experience, and have been on their current jobs for approximately 10 years.

Blue collar workers in the U.S. work about 41 hours per week, with a deeper look reflecting:

8 percent work less than 30 hours per week

13 percent work 30 to 39 hours per week

60 percent work 40 to 49 hours per week

19 percent work more than 50 hours per week

Who Are America’s Blue Collar Workers?

The survey included workers who are employed full-time, part-time or self-employed in a job that requires manual labor in one of the following industries:

construction,

manufacturing,

transportation,

warehousing,

automotive services,

maintenance,

agriculture,

forestry,

fishing,

hunting and

utilities.

Snapshot of Hours Worked

On average, U.S. blue collar workers have been working for a total of 22 years and in their current jobs for approximately 10 years.

On average, blue collar workers in the U.S. work about 41 hours per week.

8 percent work less than 30 hours per week

13 percent work 30 to 39 hours per week

60 percent work 40 to 49 hours per week

19 percent work more than 50 hours per week

Major Party Affiliation and Effectiveness

Blue collar workers are slightly more likely to identify with the Democratic party, with 35 percent vs.

31 percent for Republicans.

But by a small margin, laborers think Republicans do a better job of helping blue collar Americans than Democrats, 39 percent vs. 36 percent.

Nearly one in four (24 percent) believe neither party does a better job helping blue collar Americans.

Workers, Are You Better Off?

Fifty-five (55) percent of blue collar workers say they are better off now than they were five years ago.

20 percent say they are worse off

26 percent say they are about the same

Outlook for the future?

Eighty-eight (88) percent of blue collar parents agree with the statement, “My children will have a better future than I will.”

That contrasts with a recent Pew poll showing just 37 percent of Americans believe that today’s children will grow up to be better off financially than their parents.

Eighty (80) percent of blue collar workers are optimistic about the future,

more than one-third (34 percent) say they are “very optimistic.”

Eighty (80) percent also agree that “the harder you work, the more successful you will be,”

and 70 percent agree that “the American dream is alive for people like me.”

While 84 percent of blue collar workers say they can make ends meet,

nearly half of workers (48 percent) say it is difficult to make ends meet.

One in 10 say it is “very difficult.”

Those last three bullets spell opportunities for those manufactured housing marketers who can tap into a wider swath of the blue collar market.

Savings?

The majority of blue collar workers said they have less than $5,000 saved for an emergency.

14 percent say they currently have no money saved in case of an emergency

48 percent say they have between $1 and $4,999 saved

23 percent say they have between $5,000 and $24,999 saved

11 percent say they have $25,000 or more saved

4 percent declined to answer

Nearly three in four workers (73 percent) say they are worried about saving enough for their retirement,

and more than half of workers (53 percent) agree that it’s “more likely that Martians will land on earth than I’ll collect Social Security.”

Based upon past electoral history, certainly the upcoming midterms tend to go against the party in power. That said, with so many believing they are better off now than 5 years ago, are we really to believe that blue collar voters will turn on the candidates the president supports?